Houston-area neighborhood named top spot for rich retirees

The posh Memorial village south of I-10 made the Forbes.com list because of its luxury homes, proximity to health care and cultural amenities and number of residents of retirement age. Of Bunker Hill’s 3,600 residents, 16 percent of them are 65 or older, Forbes said. The national average is 12 percent.

That would be an interesting article, it really would. But since Nancy is a real estate reporter and not an investigative reporter I would say that homeless people probably leave few records behind them in real estate sales.

Honolulu is a tourist-trap! Higher prices on everything. I can’t see anyone with sense retiring in Honolulu, specially when there’s other parts of the islands you can retire to without having strangers up close and personal.

And if anyone drives through there who’s plate comes back as not living in the area will surely be ticketed for something…that’s how they keep the trash out…nobody drives those public roads because their personal police force has no issue with harassing the public.

Come take a look at the City of Meadows Place. Not a lot of traffic. You can be downtown in 15 to 20 minutes. It is close to several large hospitals and Sugar Land Town Center. Oh, our taxes are lower than all our neighbors!

Okay, this is the second comment about Meadows Place. Now while I would agree that Meadows Place is a nice little township the article is about wealthy subdivisions in the Houston area, not the most affordable.